LOGINThe silence stretched like a wire pulled taut.
Isabella stood frozen in the doorway, her eyes moving between her fiancé and her best friend as if watching a film she couldn't quite comprehend. Jonathan scrambled off the couch, grabbing for his pants with shaking hands. Priscilla pulled the blanket to her chin but made no move to leave, no move to cover her shame with anything more than threadbare cotton. "Bella, please." Jonathan's voice cracked. He stumbled toward her, one hand outstretched, his jeans only half-fastened. "This isn't what it looks like." Isabella laughed. The sound surprised her, a hollow, broken thing that echoed off the walls. "You're going to stand there with your pants undone and tell me this isn't what it looks like? Did you think I was born yesterday? Did you think I was that stupid?" "I didn't mean for this to happen." He was closer now, close enough that she could smell Priscilla's perfume on his skin. The same perfume she'd bought her best friend for Christmas. "It was a mistake. One mistake. We were both drunk, and she was upset about something, and one thing led to another" "One thing led to another?" Isabella's voice rose. "One thing? We've been together for three years, Jonathan. Three years. We have a wedding date. I have a dress hanging in my mother's closet. And you're telling me one thing led to another?" Behind him, Priscilla finally moved. She rose from the couch with the practiced grace of someone used to being watched, wrapping the blanket around her tall frame like a gown. Her dyed blonde hair was tousled, her brown eyes unreadable. "Bella," she said quietly. "I know you're angry. You have every right to be." "Angry?" Isabella's laugh turned bitter. "I'm not angry, Priscilla. I'm impressed. You managed to sleep with my fiancé while crying to me about being pregnant with some random guy's baby. That takes talent. That takes real dedication to the craft of being a terrible person." Priscilla flinched. "That part was true. I am pregnant." "Congratulations. Sounds like you've got plenty of options for who to put on the birth certificate." Jonathan reached for her arm. Isabella jerked away as if burned. "Don't touch me. Don't you ever touch me again." "Bella, please. I love you. You know I love you. This didn't mean anything" "Stop talking." He didn't stop. "She means nothing to me. It was physical. You and I have something real. We have a life together. We have" "I said stop talking!" The words ripped from her throat with a force that surprised them all. Jonathan's mouth snapped shut. Priscilla's eyes widened slightly. Isabella stood in the doorway of her own home, looking at the two people she trusted most in the world, and felt something fundamental shift inside her. It was like watching a building collapse in slow motion brick by brick, beam by beam, until nothing was left but rubble. "When did it start?" The question came out flat. Clinical. Jonathan exchanged a glance with Priscilla. That glance told Isabella everything she needed to know. "Answer me." "A few months ago," Priscilla said quietly. "After that party in the Hamptons. You had to work. We stayed behind." The Hamptons. Isabella had been working. She was always working. Working so they could afford that apartment. Working so Priscilla could pursue her modeling career without worrying about rent. Working so Jonathan could save for their future. While they were building something else entirely. "That night she got pregnant," Isabella said slowly. "It was yours, wasn't it?" Jonathan's face went pale. "Bella" "Was it yours?" The silence was louder than any confession. Isabella nodded slowly, processing the information the way she processed spreadsheets and quarterly reports. Facts. Data. The truth, laid bare. "So my best friend is carrying my fiancé's baby. And you both sat here, night after night, eating my food, sleeping in my home, letting me plan a surprise party to cheer her up about the pregnancy you caused." She looked at Priscilla. "Was that the plan? Throw a party to celebrate the baby you made with my man?" "It wasn't like that." Priscilla's voice wavered for the first time. "I didn't plan any of this. It just happened." "Things don't just happen. People make choices. And you both made yours." Isabella stepped back into the hallway, her hand finding the banister for support. "I want you out. Both of you. Tonight." "Bella, it's midnight. Where am I supposed to go?" Jonathan pleaded. "I don't care. Call one of your other girlfriends. I'm sure there are more I don't know about." "There aren't! I swear, there's only been" "How many?" Isabella's eyes flashed. "How many times did you cheat on me?" Jonathan's mouth opened and closed like a fish out of water. "That's what I thought." She turned to Priscilla. "You have until morning. Take what you need. Leave the rest. I'll have someone pack it up and send it wherever you end up." Priscilla's mask cracked. Tears spilled down her cheeks real ones this time, or at least better acted than before. "Bella, please. We've been friends for seven years. Seven years. You're my sister. You're the only family I have." "Should have thought about that before you climbed into bed with my fiancé." "I was lonely! You're never here! You're always working, always busy, always too tired to go out or do anything fun. Jonathan understood that. He was lonely too. We just found each other when you weren't available." The words hit like physical blows. Isabella felt each one land in her chest, her stomach, the hollow space behind her ribs where her heart used to be. "So this is my fault? I worked too hard, so you fucked my fiancé?" "That's not what I meant" "That's exactly what you meant." Isabella's voice dropped to a whisper. "You know what I was doing while you two were 'finding each other'? I was securing a job at Thorn Enterprises. A job that would have paid enough for all of us to stop struggling. I was going to tell you tonight. I was going to say, 'Don't worry about the pregnancy, don't worry about anything, I'll take care of us the way I always do.'" Priscilla's face crumpled. "But you don't get to be taken care of anymore. Neither of you does." Isabella backed toward the stairs. "Be gone by morning. If you're not, I'll call the police and report you both for breaking. This apartment is in my name. Remember?" She turned and walked up the stairs, each step feeling like she was climbing out of a grave. Behind her, Jonathan called her name. Priscilla sobbed. The sounds faded as she reached her bedroom and closed the door. Isabella stood in the darkness of the room she'd shared with no one, because Jonathan always preferred his own space. She looked at the bed where she'd slept alone for three years. At the closet where his clothes hung next to hers. At the ring on her finger that suddenly felt like a shackle. She pulled it off. The diamond caught the streetlight filtering through the curtains, winking at her like it knew a secret she didn't. Three months’ salary. Jonathan had been so proud of that. So proud that he'd spent three months of his salary on a ring for the woman he'd been cheating on. Isabella walked to the window and opened it. Cold air rushed in, carrying the sounds of the city's distant sirens, a dog barking, someone laughing somewhere far away. She threw the ring into the night. It disappeared without a sound. For a long moment, she stood there, letting the cold seep into her bones. Then she reached for her bag and pulled out Margaret's envelope. Thorn Enterprises. A fresh start. A new life in a city that suddenly felt too small to contain her pain. Her phone buzzed. Jonathan: I'll do anything. Please. I love you. She blocked his number. Priscilla: I'm so sorry. I'll leave in the morning. Please don't hate me forever. Isabella stared at the message for a long time. Seven years of friendship. Seven years of memories college nights, first apartments, broken hearts, shared dreams. All of it reduced to this. She typed back one word: Goodbye. Then she blocked that number too. Isabella Davenport sat on the edge of her bed in the apartment that suddenly felt like a stranger's home, and for the first time in years, she had no idea what came next. The envelope from Margaret Chen lay in her lap like a promise or a threat. Thorn Enterprises. A man she'd never met. A job she hadn't earned yet. A future that had nothing to do with the two people downstairs who were probably still trying to figure out how to salvage the mess they'd made. She thought about calling her mother. She thought about calling anyone. But who do you call when the two people closest to you have become strangers? Outside, the city hummed on, indifferent to her pain. Isabella lay back on the bed and stared at the ceiling until the sky turned gray with dawn.The morning after the revelation, the house was buzzing with a new energy.Isabella woke to the sound of laughter, Lucas's laughter, bright and unrestrained. She sat up, blinking sleep from her eyes, and found Sebastian already awake, a smile on his face."What's going on?" she asked."Damien is teaching Lucas how to make pancakes."She climbed out of bed, padding barefoot to the kitchen. The scene that greeted her made her heart swell.Damien stood at the stove, a spatula in his hand, his dark hair loose around his shoulders. Lucas stood on a stool beside him, his face covered in flour, his tongue sticking out in concentration. They were laughing together, their voices mingling in a harmony that felt like hope."Flip it," Damien said. "Gently."Lucas flipped the pancake. It landed perfectly in the pan."I did it!" Lucas cheered."You did it." Damien pulled him into a hug. "I'm proud of you."Isabella leaned against the doorframe, tears streaming down her face.Sebastian found her the
The afternoon sun cast long shadows across the garden as Isabella knelt among the roses, her hands in the dirt, her mind elsewhere.She had been trying to find peace in the simple rhythm of planting, but the events of the past weeks refused to quiet. Damien's arrival. His confession. The impossible choice that still hung in the air between them all.She heard footsteps on the path and looked up.Damien stood at the edge of the garden, his hands in his pockets, his face pale. He looked like he hadn't slept in days, with dark circles under his eyes, his jaw tight with tension."Isabella." His voice was soft. "Can we talk?"She stood, brushing dirt from her jeans. "Of course."They walked to the bench by the fountain, the same bench where so many conversations had taken place. The water burbled softly, the roses bloomed around them, and the world felt suspended in time."I've been thinking," Damien said. "About the past. About the choices I made. About the person I used to be.""And?""A
The morning after Damien's arrival, the house was heavy with unspoken words.Isabella sat at the kitchen table, a cup of coffee growing cold in her hands, her mind still reeling from the events of the previous night. Sebastian was in the garden, his back to her, his shoulders tense. Damien was on the porch, his face turned toward the ocean, his expression unreadable.She had spent years trying to forget Damien. Had built a life, a family, a future without him. And now he was here, asking her to give it all up.But she couldn't. Not completely."Isabella." Eleanor's voice came from behind her. "You need to eat.""I'm not hungry.""You need to eat anyway." Eleanor set a plate of toast in front of her. "You can't think on an empty stomach."Isabella picked up a piece of toast, forcing herself to take a bite. "What do I do?""About what?""About Damien. About Sebastian. About all of it."Eleanor sat across from her. "You listen to your heart.""My heart is confused.""Then listen to your
The morning after the brunch, Isabella woke with a sense of peace she hadn't felt in years.She lay in bed, listening to the sound of waves crashing against the shore, Sebastian's arm warm around her waist. The sunlight filtered through the curtains, casting golden patterns across the ceiling. For the first time in what felt like forever, she wasn't waiting for the other shoe to drop.She was just... living.Sebastian stirred beside her, his eyes fluttering open. "Good morning.""Good morning." She smiled, turning to face him. "Sleep well?""Better than I have in months." He pulled her closer. "You?""The same."He kissed her forehead. "I love you.""I know." She pressed her face against his chest. "I love you too."The day passed in a blur of normalcy.Isabella worked in the garden, planting new roses and pruning the old ones. The children played on the lawn, their laughter echoing across the yard. Eleanor read on the porch, Ruth tended to the herbs, and Genevieve helped with the coo
The morning of her return, Isabella woke before dawn.She lay in the hotel bed, watching the first light creep across the ceiling, her heart heavy with the weight of her decision. Eleanor was asleep in the chair by the window, her silver hair loose, her face soft. She had stayed with Isabella through the weeks of silence, of healing, of trying to find herself again.Now it was time to go home.Isabella slipped out of bed, careful not to wake her mother. She dressed quickly, packed her small bag, and wrote a note.Mom,I'm going home. I need to face this. I need to stop running.Thank you for everything.I love you. IsabellaShe left the note on the pillow and walked out the door.The drive to Portland was long and quiet.Isabella sat in the driver's seat, the road stretching out before her, the ocean on one side, the mountains on the other. She thought about Sebastian, about the years they had shared, about the moments that had been real and the moments that had been lies.She though
The weight of the contract pressed down on Isabella like a physical force.She sat at the kitchen table, the document spread out before her, the words blurring together. If she leaves before two years, she owes him one million dollars in damages. The clause stared up at her, cold and unforgiving, a trap she had walked into with her eyes wide open.She had trusted him. She had believed in him. She had given him everything.And he had trapped her."Isabella." Sebastian's voice came from behind her. "Please. Let me explain.""There's nothing to explain." She didn't turn around. "You lied to me. You manipulated me. You made sure I couldn't leave.""I was trying to protect us.""By trapping me?""By giving us time." He moved closer, his voice cracking. "Time to work things out. Time to build something real.""And if we hadn't?""Then I would have let you go."She laughed in a hollow, broken sound. "You expect me to believe that?""I don't expect you to believe anything." He reached for her
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, thick cream-colored paper embossed with the Thorn family crest.Isabella stood at the kitchen counter, reading it for the third time, her hands shaking. Sebastian was beside her, his face pale, his jaw tight.The family of Alexander Thorn regrets to inform you of hi
The pier was shrouded in mist.Isabella stood at the railing, Sebastian beside her, his hand on her back. The fog rolled in from the ocean, thick and gray, swallowing the world beyond the wooden planks. Somewhere in the distance, a foghorn moaned.She hated this place. Hated the secrets it held, th
The lighthouse keeper's cottage stood at the edge of the cliff, its windows dark, its door hanging open.Isabella stood in the doorway, her heart pounding, her eyes scanning the shadows. Thomas Webb had disappeared into the fog, his threat still echoing in her ears. I'm here to finish what he start
The weeks that followed were a blur of grief and healing.Victoria stayed in Portland, renting a small cottage near the beach. She came to dinner every Sunday, bringing wine and stories and the kind of tentative hope that came from trying to rebuild a bridge that had been burned decades ago.Damien







